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The Glove

 
Artist: The Glove
 

Group Members:

Robert Smith, Steven Severin

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  • Formed: 1983
  • Disbanded: 1983
  • Genres: Rock

Biography

Superstar side projects have always rattled around the music scene, one-off outings conceived for any reason you like -- to scratch a creative itch, to fulfill a personal vanity, or simply just to confuse and confound an audience that has been growing far too complacent. Occasionally, however, it works. The art rock underground still thrills to the memory of the nights that Nick Cave, Marc Almond, Lydia Lunch, and Foetus came together as the Immaculate Consumptives in 1983; and the gothic crowd still trembles at the memory of the Glove, the similarly short-lived but superbly styled union of the Cure's Robert Smith and Siouxsie and the Banshees' Steven Severin.

The Glove wasn't that great a stretch of the imagination. The pair had been friends since they first met in the late '70s; the Cure undertook their first ever British tour as special guests of the Banshees, in late 1979, and when the headliners' guitarist went unexpectedly AWOL, half a dozen concerts into the itinerary, Smith was quick to fill the gap, playing two full sets every night.

The tour over, the Banshees ushered in a full-time replacement and Smith returned to the Cure. But when that band apparently broke up in June 1982, Smith's first move was to record a single for Flexipop magazine, alongside Severin ("Lament"), and when the Banshees once again required a guitarist, Smith stepped into the breach.

Over the next six months, of course, the Cure did creep back into action, even as the Banshees worked constantly, while Smithand Severin also birthed a project they had been discussing since 1981, the Glove (so named for a character in the Beatles' Yellow Submarine movie).

With the "group" completed by vocalist/dancer Jeanette Landray, the duo's original idea was to cut a one-off single only. Their writing sessions, however, knew no such boundaries. Days turned to weeks, which transformed, in turn, to months. Smith later boasted, "when we went into the studio, we ended up with 15 songs after three days. And we put them on a record. An odd record."

In fact, the entire project consumed close to three months, but Smith was right about one thing. It was an odd record. According to Banshees drummer Budgie, he and Siouxsie "looked in on a couple of sessions, and couldn't believe what was going on...a situation obviously fuelled by parties and various substances."

The project was doomed to obscurity, however; by the time Blue Sunshine was actually released, that late summer of 1983, both the Banshees and the Cure were enjoying their biggest hit singles yet ("Dear Prudence" and "The Lovecats," respectively); both were preparing to record new albums; both were appearing on British television on an almost weekly basis. The Glove was simply buried beneath the weight of its peers.

A pair of singles went unnoticed, and hopes of a Glove tour -- or even a handful of concerts -- were dashed. The group did make a couple of TV appearances, the first in October with a couple of Smith's Cure bandmates accompanying the lead trio through a version of the "Punish Me With Kisses" 45 and, with the entire thing completely forgotten by all but the most obsessive fans, the following March, when Britain's Channel 4 TV network invited the Banshees to take part in a new series called Play at Home -- a series of rock mock documentaries that essentially allowed the lunatics to take over the asylum and present whatever they wanted to the watching millions. The Glove turned in a suitably addled performance, but that was the end. Although occasional rumors have resurfaced around a reunion, the band remains nothing but a memory. A very odd memory. ~ Dave Thompson, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Glove
Top
The Glove
Steve Severin (left) and Robert Smith on the cover of Blue Sunshine
Steve Severin (left) and Robert Smith on the cover of Blue Sunshine
Background information
Genre(s) Post-punk
New Wave
Years active 1983
Former members
Robert Smith
Steven Severin
Jeanette Landray
Andy Anderson
Martin McCarrick
Ginny Heyes
Anne Stephenson

The Glove is a supergroup that was a side project of Steven Severin and Robert Smith from British rock bands Siouxsie & the Banshees and The Cure, respectively. They released only one album, Blue Sunshine in August 1983 including the singles "Like An Animal" and "Punish Me With Kisses".

Contents

Overview

The Glove project was founded as a diversion when both Smith and Severin were under heavy stress in their respective bands.

In June 1982, Smith was on the verge of breakdown, drained from production of The Cure's bleakest album, 1982's Pornography, and its tour, from substance abuse and from band infighting that had led to bassist Simon Gallup's departure.

In October 1982, guitarist John McGeoch left Siouxsie & the Banshees due to illness, shortly before the announcement of an important European tour. In a matter of days, Smith filled in and officially became a member of Siouxsie & the Banshees in November 1982.

Two months later, in January 1983, Siouxsie & Budgie left England to record an album on their own as The Creatures.

Meanwhile, Severin and Smith both started to work on a project called The Glove. The band's name refers to the enormous flying glove in The Beatles' 1968 animated movie Yellow Submarine, and the album's title refers an eponymous horror film in which people who took the fictional "Blue Sunshine" variety of LSD became psychotic murderers ten years later.

Since Smith was contractually prohibited from singing with another band (one of the reasons he cited for the 2001 split from The Cure's longtime label), former dancer Jeanette Landray (then-girlfriend of Severin's bandmate Budgie) was recruited as the lead singer. Smith sings on two of the songs, "Mr. Alphabet Says" and "Perfect Murder."

In 2005, Severin proposed re-releasing Blue Sunshine. (Smith is gradually re-releasing The Cure's back catalog, remastered with unreleased tracks, studio outtakes, live versions and B-sides of each album's era.) Smith agreed and the remaster was released as a two-CD set on August 8th, 2006 alongside three Cure re-releases. On the second disc, a dozen of unreleased demo versions sung by Robert Smith appeared for the first time.

Personnel

  • Steve Severin - bass
  • Robert Smith - guitar, vocals on original recording of "Mr. Alphabet Says", "Perfect Murder", and Disc 2 of Deluxe Edition
  • Jeanette Landray - vocals on majority of tracks on original album
  • Martin McCarrick - keyboards, real strings (later joined Siouxsie and the Banshees)
  • Ginny Heyes - real strings
  • Anne Stephenson - real strings
  • Andy Anderson - real drums (later joined The Cure)
  • The Man From Nowhere - musical interludes between tracks

Special Guest

Discography

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Glove" Read more